Sea shanties and maritime music

To those who know and can feel, there is a smack of salt spray in every line of these rude virile verses. To them once again will come back the creak of the blocks as the falls whine through them, and the dead heavy lurch as the boat jerks upwards... I can hardly think of any words or tunes that appeal more intimately to all the spirit of adventure that life has left in me.

Arthur Conan Doyle, Letter to F. T. Bullen, 1914

This Day in History (February 29, 1908)

This Day in History (January 8, 1806)

The death of Lord Nelson was a national tragedy like no other for England. "From Greenwich to Whitehall Stairs, on the 8th of January, 1806, in one of the greatest Aquatic Processions that ever was beheld on the River Thames" drifted the royal shallop (barge). The event is referenced in the modern lament, Carrying Nelson Home. Nelson is mentioned in nearly a dozen other songs.

Try a random shanty sampling

The Banks of the Nile
Forecastle song

Hark, I hear the drums beating—no longer can I stay,
I hear the trumpets sounding, my love I must away.
We are ordered from Portsmouth many a long mile,
For To join the British soldiers on the banks of the Nile.

Willie, dearest Willie, don't leave me here to mourn,
You'll make me curse and rue the day that ever I was born.
For the parting of my own true love is parting of my life,
So stay at home dear Willie and I will be your wife.

I will cut off my my yellow locks and go along with you,
I will dress myself in velveteens and go see Egypt too,
I will fight or bear your banner while kind fortune seems to smile,
And we'll comfort one another on the banks of the Nile.

Nancy, dearest Nancy, with me you cannot stay,
Our colonel he gives order: no women there shall go,
We must forget our own sweethearts besides our native soil,
And go fight the Blacks and Heathens on the banks of the Nile.

Your waist it is too slender love, your waist it is too small.
I'd be afraid you would not answer me when on you I would call,
Your delicate constitution would not hear the unwholesome clime,
Nor the cold sandy deserts on the banks of the Nile.

My curse attend the war and the day it first began,
It has robbed old Ireland of many a clever man,
It took from us our true loves, the protectors of our soil,
To fight the Blacks and Negroes on the banks of the Nile.

So now the war is over and homewards we'll return,
Unto our sweethearts and wives we left behind to mourn,
We'll embrace them in our arms until the end of time,
And we'll go no more to battle on the banks of the Nile.